| to bark; yelp. |
| to spend time idly; loaf. |
cut (kʌt) ![]() | |
| —vb (sometimes foll by out) (often foll by down) (when intr, | |
| 1. | to open up or incise (a person or thing) with a sharp edge or instrument; gash |
| 2. | (of a sharp instrument) to penetrate or incise (a person or thing) |
| 3. | to divide or be divided with or as if with a sharp instrument: cut a slice of bread |
| 4. | (intr) to use a sharp-edged instrument or an instrument that cuts |
| 5. | (tr) to trim or prune by or as if by clipping: to cut hair |
| 6. | (tr) to reap or mow (a crop, grass, etc) |
| 7. | (tr) to geld or castrate |
| 8. | to make, form, or shape by cutting: to cut a suit |
| 9. | (tr) to hollow or dig out; excavate: to cut a tunnel through the mountain |
| 10. | to strike (an object) sharply |
| 11. | (tr) sport to hit (a ball) with a downward slicing stroke so as to impart spin or cause it to fall short |
| 12. | cricket to hit (the ball) to the off side, usually between cover and third man, with a roughly horizontal bat |
| 13. | to hurt or wound the feelings of (a person), esp by malicious speech or action |
| 14. | informal (tr) to refuse to recognize; snub |
| 15. | informal (tr) to absent oneself from (an activity, location, etc), esp without permission or in haste: to cut class |
| 16. | (tr) to abridge, shorten, or edit by excising a part or parts |
| 17. | to lower, reduce, or curtail: to cut losses |
| 18. | (tr) to dilute or weaken: heroin that was cut with nontoxic elements |
| 19. | (tr) to dissolve or break up: to cut fat |
| 20. | to cross or traverse: the footpath cuts through the field |
| 21. | (intr) to make a sharp or sudden change in direction; veer |
| 22. | to grow (teeth) through the gums or (of teeth) to appear through the gums |
| 23. | (intr) films |
| a. to call a halt to a shooting sequence | |
| b. ( | |
| 24. | films to edit (film) |
| 25. | (tr) to switch off (a light, car engine, etc) |
| 26. | (tr) (of a performer, recording company, etc) to make (a record or tape of a song, concert, performance, etc) |
| 27. | cards |
| a. to divide (the pack) at random into two parts after shuffling | |
| b. (intr) to pick cards from a spread pack to decide dealer, partners, etc | |
| 28. | (tr) to remove (material) from an object by means of a chisel, lathe, etc |
| 29. | (tr) (of a tool) to bite into (an object) |
| 30. | (intr) (of a horse) to injure the leg just above the hoof by a blow from the opposite foot |
| 31. | cut a caper, cut capers |
| a. to skip or jump playfully | |
| b. to act or behave playfully; frolic | |
| 32. | cut both ways |
| a. to have both good and bad effects | |
| b. to affect both sides of something, as two parties in an argument, etc | |
| 33. | cut a dash to behave or dress showily or strikingly; make a stylish impression |
| 34. | informal cut a person dead to ignore a person completely |
| 35. | cut a good figure to appear or behave well |
| 36. | cut a poor figure to appear or behave badly |
| 37. | informal cut and run to make a rapid escape |
| 38. | slang cut it be successful in doing something |
| 39. | informal cut it fine to allow little margin of time, space, etc |
| 40. | cut corners to do something in the easiest or shortest way, esp at the expense of high standards: we could finish this project early only if we cut corners |
| 41. | cut loose to free or become freed from restraint, custody, anchorage, etc |
| 42. | informal cut no ice to fail to make an impression |
| 43. | cut one's losses to give up spending time, money, or energy on an unprofitable or unsuccessful activity |
| 44. | informal cut one's teeth on |
| a. to use at an early age or stage | |
| b. to practise on | |
| —adj | |
| 45. | detached, divided, or separated by cutting |
| 46. | botany incised or divided: cut leaves |
| 47. | made, shaped, or fashioned by cutting |
| 48. | reduced or diminished by or as if by cutting: cut prices |
| 49. | gelded or castrated |
| 50. | weakened or diluted |
| 51. | (Brit) a slang word for drunk |
| 52. | hurt; resentful |
| 53. | informal cut and dried settled or arranged in advance |
| 54. | (Austral), (NZ) cut lunch a sandwich lunch carried from home to work, school, etc |
| —n | |
| 55. | the act of cutting |
| 56. | a stroke or incision made by cutting; gash |
| 57. | a piece or part cut off, esp a section of food cut from the whole: a cut of meat |
| 58. | the edge of anything cut or sliced |
| 59. | a passage, channel, path, etc, cut or hollowed out |
| 60. | an omission or deletion, esp in a text, film, or play |
| 61. | a reduction in price, salary, etc |
| 62. | a decrease in government finance in a particular department or area, usually leading to a reduction of services, staff numbers, etc |
| 63. | short for power cut |
| 64. | chiefly (US), (Canadian) a quantity of timber cut during a specific time or operation |
| 65. | informal a portion or share |
| 66. | informal a straw, slip of paper, etc, used in drawing lots |
| 67. | the manner or style in which a thing, esp a garment, is cut; fashion |
| 68. | a. informal (Irish) a person's general appearance: I didn't like the cut of him |
| b. derogatory (Irish) a dirty or untidy condition: look at the cut of your shoes | |
| 69. | a direct route; short cut |
| 70. | the US name for block |
| 71. | sport the spin of a cut ball |
| 72. | cricket a stroke made with the bat in a roughly horizontal position |
| 73. | films an immediate transition from one shot to the next, brought about by splicing the two shots together |
| 74. | informal an individual piece of music on a record; track |
| 75. | words or an action that hurt another person's feelings |
| 76. | a refusal to recognize an acquaintance; snub |
| 77. | informal chiefly (US) an unauthorized absence, esp from a school class |
| 78. | chem a fraction obtained in distillation, as in oil refining |
| 79. | the metal removed in a single pass of a machine tool |
| 80. | a. the shape of the teeth of a file |
| b. their coarseness or fineness | |
| 81. | (Brit) a stretch of water, esp a canal |
| 82. | informal a cut above superior (to); better (than) |
| 83. | golf make the cut to better or equal the required score after two rounds in a strokeplay tournament, thus avoiding elimination from the final two rounds |
| 84. | golf miss the cut to achieve a greater score after the first two rounds of a strokeplay tournament than that required to play in the remaining two rounds |
| [C13: probably of Scandinavian origin; compare Norwegian kutte to cut, Icelandic kuti small knife] | |
cut (kŭt)
v. cut, cut·ting, cuts
To penetrate with a sharp edge; strike a narrow opening in.
To separate into parts with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument; sever.
To make an incision or a separation.
To have a new tooth grow through the gums.
To form or shape by severing or incising.
To separate from a body; detach.
To lessen the strength of; dilute.
The act of cutting.
The result of cutting, especially an opening or wound made by a sharp edge.
cut definition
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cut (up) definition
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cut
In addition to the idioms beginning with cut, also see (cut) down to size; fish or cut bait; have one's work cut out; like a chicken with its head cut off; make (cut) a long story short; unkindest cut; you could cut it with a knife.